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Hard Men of Cricket

Line and Length

Cricketer Of The Year
By 'hard' I mean ruthless, resolute and somewhat set in their ways. Two that spring to mind are from a similar era - Ian Chappell and Ray Illingworth.

Illingworth in particular could be quite ruthless. He once said of Graham Hick, “A bit of a soft centre? We dropped Hick after one game and he left the ground crying. If anyone had done that in my time he’d have never been picked again.

Illingworth was brought up in the tough atmosphere of Yorkshire cricket in the fifties where players like Hutton, Trueman, Close and Wardle took no nonsense. However, there was one man at that Club at the time who was the epitome of the 'hard man' - Arthur 'Ticker' Mitchell.
Hutton said of Mitchell, “A very hard man. Too hard for me really.

The young Len Hutton, early in his career found himself sent to field beside Mitchell in the slips. Normally the slips were reserved for elder statesmen, while the young did the running about. Mitchell eyed the future knight and master batsman critically. “What the **** are you doing here?” he asked.

Mitchell's batting matched his attitude. Herbert Sutcliffe opened with him pre WWII and said of him, ”As grim and steadfast as a piece of stone from the Baildon Moors that are so near his home.”

Bill Bowes described an incident involving Mitchell thus: “Arthur ‘Ticker’ Mitchell who never gave a word of praise (and who once growled under his breath after Ellis Robinson had made a spectacular dive and caught the ball with his finger-tips, ‘Gerrup, th’art makin’ an exhibition o’ thiself.’)” What would he make of the current behaviour of cricketers?

Geoffrey Boycott remembers Mitchell when he was Yorkshire's coach: “Literally hundreds of Yorkshire boys feared Arthur Mitchell. Many a lad went home on a dark winter’s night with tears in his eyes after a roasting. I can never remember Mitchell uttering one word of praise . . .You were really lucky if he restricted himself to: ‘Not too bad, but keep that left elbow up’"

Finally Fred Trueman's view of the man: “A man of dark intensity who seemed to growl rather than speak. If the occasion arose when praise was called for, the words had to be forced from a sparse vocabulary. The type of man who, if he went riding with the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, would not noticeably enliven the party.”
 

Chubb

International Regular
Peter Willey was apparently a very tough man, he once (allegedly) threw Ian Botham in a swimming pool after losing his temper. It's why he was a good umpire and why he scored a lot of his test runs against the Windies' pace quartet.

Probably had to defend himself a lot as a kid, with that surname.
 

Line and Length

Cricketer Of The Year
Brian Close was a tough fella, never took a backward step.
He certainly was.

“His toughness was legendary,” Michael Holding, one of those West Indian pacemen, said. “The mere fact that England thought Close, 45 years old, was the right man to come back to face West Indies in 1976 with the four-man pace attack shows you what they thought of him.”

In the field, Close would stand only feet from the hardest-hitting batsmen, taking a huge personal risk so he could invade their comfort zones. He psyched out the West Indian captain Garry Sobers, then the finest batsman in the world, into hitting a simple catch to him in 1966.
When an alarmed batsman asked, “What will happen if the ball hits you between the eyes ?” Close calmly retorted that the rebound would be caught by another fielder. He also argued that the ball could not hurt much since “it is only on you for a second.”

To get rid of Alvin Kallicharran, who loved to sweep, Pat Pocock was told to bowl on leg stump, 'I'll field at short leg, I'll block the shot with my chest and Knotty you take the catch,' Close said.
 

Himannv

Hall of Fame Member
"My first objective is to hit the batsman. The moment I hit them, I know I've got them. Then they'll run away from my bowling and it's an easy thing for me." - Roy Gilchrist
 

Burgey

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Geoffrey Boycott remembers Mitchell when he was Yorkshire's coach: “Literally hundreds of Yorkshire boys feared Arthur Mitchell. Many a lad went home on a dark winter’s night with tears in his eyes after a roasting. I can never remember Mitchell uttering one word of praise . . .You were really lucky if he restricted himself to: ‘Not too bad, but keep that left elbow up’"

Finally Fred Trueman's view of the man: “A man of dark intensity who seemed to growl rather than speak. If the occasion arose when praise was called for, the words had to be forced from a sparse vocabulary. The type of man who, if he went riding with the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, would not noticeably enliven the party.”
I love this. I modeled my own coaching style on Mitchell and Ron Barassi.
 

Aidan11

International Vice-Captain
Brian Close was the hardest I can think of.

Almost lamped Boycott once in the dressing room according to his autobiography. A few of his team mates had to intervene.
 

jcas0167

International Regular
Viv Richards, Jared Miandad (how many batsmen sledged bowlers?) special mention to Roy Fredericks.

Some say they called Fredericks Kid Cement because he was so fearless. Some say he once flicked a V sign at Len Pascoe after being hit on the head by a bouncer. Some say he habitually called everyone he didn't know "old chap". Some say was a terrible runner between the wickets. Some say he batted not just without a helmet, but without any chest or arm guards either. Some say his 169 was the greatest knock ever played on Australian soil.
During World Series Cricket, Freddo, who though he was edging towards 36 and a man who seemed affronted by any suggestion to don a protective helmet, was clocked on the head by Graham McKenzie and one other. Yet he simply shook his head and batted on. Some of the Aussies dubbed him "cement head".
 
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Blenkinsop

U19 Captain
Will never forget Ricky Ponting copping a full blooded drive right in the mouth whilst fielding at silly mid-off, spitting out a bit of blood and then carrying on.
 

Nintendo

Cricketer Of The Year
I love hard men. Rodney hogg is a favourite, his name is a perfect fit. Don't know if they could show it on a cricket field though
 

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